Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Today's Print

Local shares drop despite BSP rate cut, as profit taking ends rally

Local shares succumbed to profit-taking on Thursday after two straight days of gains.

The index also fell even though the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) cut interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.75 percent.

- Advertisement -

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index shed 41.34 points, or 0.66 percent, to close at 6,057.40, while the broader all-shares index declined by 17.64 points, or 0.48 percent, to 3,667.01.

The peso depreciated to 58.235 to the U.S. dollar on Thursday from 57.95 on Wednesday.

The BSP reduced the overnight borrowing rate amid a benign and within-target inflation outlook.

“The PSEi ended its two-day winning streak as profit-taking weighed on the market early in the session,” said Luis Limlingan, head of sales at Regina Capital Development Corp.

He, however, noted that the latest rate cut, which was announced after trading ended, will serve as a catalyst and boost market sentiment moving forward.

Sectors ended mixed, with mining and oil, property and financials closing in positive territory. Mining and oil jumped the most, up 2.8 percent as gold prices continued to go up in the world market.

On the other hand, financials, services and holding firms closed lower.

Value turnover amounted to P6.01 billion. Decliners outnumbered gainers 135 to 72, while 55 stocks were unchanged.

Asian markets were mixed on Thursday as investors tried to assess the outlook for the global AI-fueled rally, Federal Reserve interest rates and the US government shutdown.

News that Israel and Hamas had agreed to the first phase of a Gaza ceasefire provided some relief from geopolitical concerns, while gold retreated the day after hitting an all-time high above $4,000.

Technology firms have been riding to ever-higher levels this year — dragging equity markets with them as companies pump hundreds of billions of dollars into all things linked to AI.

But there is growing concern that the returns might not match the investment sums, leading to warnings that valuations may have gone too far.

“AI is clearly a bubble,” warned Neil Wilson at Saxo markets. “The question is when — not if — it blows up. And timing is incredibly hard,” he said.

“(Software giant) Oracle had a stab at pricking the bubble yesterday by disclosing that the margins from its AI cloud business — including server rentals using Nvidia chips — are very slim.

“Tesla added to the gravity… as it dropped 4.5 percent on (its) lower-priced Model 3/Y reveal that underwhelmed analysts. Third-quarter earnings are still set to be strong, but doubts are being seeded for later.”

However, while the Oracle report dragged Wall Street on Tuesday, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq bounced back the day after to end at fresh records.

In Asia, Tokyo rallied 1.8 percent on continued optimism about further stimulus following the election of business-friendly Sanae Takaichi as leader of Japan’s ruling party.

Shanghai advanced as it reopened after a week-long holiday, while Sydney, Wellington, Taipei, Mumbai and Bangkok were also up, and Frankfurt opened at a record high. Paris was also higher.

Hong Kong dipped along with Singapore, Manila, Jakarta and London.

The US shutdown was not helping matters, with Republicans and Democrats no closer to reaching a deal to reopen the government as the row goes into a second week.

Democrats voted for a sixth time to block a Republican stopgap funding measure to reopen government departments — they refuse to back any funding bill that does not offer an extension of expiring health care subsidies for 24 million people.

Minutes from the Fed’s latest rate meeting showed divisions among decision-makers on cutting them, with some agreeing only after being persuaded in discussion over rising prices and a string of weak jobs figures.

“Policymakers that are becoming increasingly concerned about downside risks to employment likely favor additional and faster rate cuts going forward,” HSBC’s Ryan Wang said.

“Those that are more concerned about upside inflation risks are likely more circumspect about future cuts.”

Geopolitical worries were eased after news that Israel and Hamas agreed on Thursday to the first phase of a deal to end the Gaza war that has killed tens of thousands and at times fanned worries of a possible wider Middle East conflict.

Donald Trump announced a 20-point peace plan that would see Palestinian militant group Hamas release all hostages, while Israel would pull its troops back to an agreed-upon line.

Oil prices inched up, having initially dropped on news of the deal.

Gold, which hit a record of nearly $4,060 an ounce Wednesday — partly on concerns about the Gaza crisis — was slightly lower.

In company news, Hong Kong-listed Hang Seng Bank soared more than 26 percent on reports that HSBC plans to take it private by buying its remaining shares. The deal values the lender at US$37 billion. HSBC tumbled seven percent.

HSBC Asia and Middle East co-chief executive David Liao told reporters the plan was “an investment in Hong Kong’s development potential — a growth plan”. With AFP

- Advertisement -

Leave a review

RECENT STORIES

spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img
spot_img
spot_imgspot_imgspot_img
Popular Categories
- Advertisement -spot_img